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Mark Osmack has been out of the electoral fray for awhile, but he never completely abandoned his passion for Missouri politics. Osmack, a Valley Park native and U.S. Army veteran, previously ran for Missouri's 2nd Congressional District seat and for state Senate. During an episode of Politically Speaking, Osmack received a phone call from Missouri Democratic Party Chairman Russ Carnahan asking him to run for state treasurer. “There's a lot of decision making and processing and evaluation that goes into it, which is something I am very passionate and interested in,” Osmack said. Osmack is squaring off against state Treasurer Vivek Malek, who was able to easily win a crowded GOP primary against several veteran lawmakers — including House Chairman Cody Smith and Sen. Andrew Koenig.
In this segment of the Marc Cox Morning Show, Marc Cox first discusses his voter guide and endorsements before welcoming Missouri gubernatorial candidate Bill Eigel in the second segment. They delve into the dynamics of the Missouri governor race, including Donald Trump's endorsements, criticisms of Mike Kehoe and other candidates, and Eigel's plans to eliminate personal property and income taxes. Eigel also discusses the influence of special interests in Jefferson City and his vision for disrupting the political status quo. The hour wraps up with "In Other News" featuring Kim St. Onge.
Malek is definitely getting a crash course in Missouri politics this summer. After Gov. Mike Parson appointed him to the treasurer's office after Scott Fitzpatrick became state auditor, Malek is running for a full four-year term against five other GOP candidates in the Aug. 6 primary: House Budget Chairman Cody Smith, state Sen. Andrew Koenig, Springfield resident Lori Rook, St. Joseph resident Tina Goodrick and Berkeley resident Karan Pujji. Malek has raised by far the most money for the statewide contest that typically flies below the radar. He's making the case that he's done a capable enough job thus far in office, including returning record amounts of unclaimed property and expanding a program called MoBUCK$ that provides low-interest loans to certain businesses. “When I became treasurer, my whole purpose was to do the job — not to get the job,” Malek said. “I have done great in my professional career and the business that I had. And now it was time for me to take some time off from my regular occupation, come to this field, and do my service as a public servant with a servant's heart.”
THE TIM JONES AND CHRIS ARPS SHOW 0:00 SEG 1 Denny Hoskins and Andrew Koenig stop by https://dennyhoskins.com/ https://electandrewkoenig.com/ Charles Barkley is punching black people who wear a Trump mugshot shirt | The White House will no longer require journalists to take a COVID test | Landfills too close to schools | Banning rank choice voting | Designating driver's licenses as CITIZEN so only CITIZENS can vote | Banning a federal digital currency Today's Speaker's Stump Speech is brought to you by https://www.hansenstree.com/ and is about the unintended consequences of a net zero agenda 20:00 SEG 2 RANDY TOBLER, Host of The Randy Tobler Show on NewsTalkSTL Saturday mornings from 6-9 and co-host of Wake Up Mid-Missouri weekdays on 93.9 The Eagle in Columbia, talks about CVS and Walgreen carrying the abortion pill | Super Tuesday | 9-0 SCOTUS decision in favor of Trump's name staying on the ballot | Doctors are increasingly charging patients a fee for texts and emailshttps://twitter.com/RandyToblerMD 36:57 SEG 3 Rep. Justin Sparks joins us | Miami Beach is cracking down on spring breakers | Kyrsten Sinema is not running for re-election FOLLOW TIM - https://twitter.com/SpeakerTimJones FOLLOW CHRIS - https://twitter.com/chris_arps 24/7 LIVESTREAM - http://bit.ly/newstalkstlstream RUMBLE - https://rumble.com/NewsTalkSTL See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Missouri Senator Andrew Koenig discusses how he got into politics and top priorities for the current session. Andrew Koenig https://electandrewkoenig.com/ Support Triple Play https://www.buzzsprout.com/2112944/support Get some Swag Gear at https://www.tripleplaylife.com Brookes Bible College https://www.brookes.edu/ Resource One Advisors https://www.RS1A.com CS Design https://csdesign.online Support the show
Andrew Koenig discusses the importance of IP reform in Missouri. Andrew Koenig https://electandrewkoenig.com/ Support Triple Play https://www.buzzsprout.com/2112944/support Get some Swag Gear at https://www.tripleplaylife.com Brookes Bible College https://www.brookes.edu/ Resource One Advisors https://www.RS1A.com CS Design https://csdesign.online Support the show
In the 2nd hour of the Marc Cox Morning Show: Marc talks with caller Tony over if he would vote for Nikki if she was the nominee Illegals are pouring into the southern border from all over the world now Nicole Murray from This Morning with Gordon Deal, joins the crew to give us a check of the markets In Other News with Ethan: 3 go to trial in the Hotel California Case, The Beatles get 4 movies, Beyoncé takes the top spot, and Aldi's has your $5 wine fix Coming Up: Genevieve Wood and Sen. Andrew Koenig
Sen. Andrew Koenig of the MO Dist. 15, joins Marc & Kim to discuss the passing of Initiative Petition reform, what it is, why it needs to pass, and what was dropped to get it moved forward.
In the 3rd hour of the Marc Cox Morning Show: Tucker thinks the border crisis is deliberate Marc gives insight into the upcoming Missouri caucus Sen. Andrew Koenig of the MO Dist. 15, joins Marc & Kim to discuss the passing of Initiative Petition reform, what it is, why it needs to pass, and what was dropped to get it moved forward. Genevieve Wood, Senior Advisor at the Heritage Foundation, talks with Marc & Kim about the US Navy's STEM 'Equity' Program that prioritized candidates and internships based on Race. Coming Up: Jason Smith and Charles Payne
Republicans have supermajorities in both legislative chambers in Jefferson City. They control the Missouri Senate 24-10 and have a 111-51 supermajority in the Missouri House. Missouri Senate Education and Workforce Development Committee chairman Andrew Koenig (R-Manchester) joined us live this morning on 939 the Eagle's "Wake Up Mid-Missouri". Senator Koenig confirms there's a lot of infighting in the GOP ranks in Jefferson City, saying it will make it harder to get things done. But he's optimistic about education, touting school choice and his bill expanding the Missouri Empowerment Scholarship Accounts (ESA) program. Senator Koenig's Senate Bill 727 increases the amount of tax credits that can be allocated in any year from $50 million to $75-million. Chairman Koenig also touts what he calls school choice, and rejects criticism from Democrats that it defunds public education. Senator Koenig tells listeners that school choice is positive for Missouri's public schools:
Stay tuned for live updates as Senator Andrew Koenig joins The Marc Cox Morning Broadcast airing from Jefferson City for the start of Missouri's 2024 legislative session. Explore insights into pivotal legislative agendas encompassing the initiative petition procedure, educational restructuring, ESA extension, and measures addressing LGBTQ+ matters within educational institutions.
In this final hour of The Marc Cox Morning Show live from Missouri's capitol, Governor Mike Parson discusses China policies and Missouri's legislative direction. Senator Andrew Koenig provides insights into key legislative agendas. Speaker Dean Plocher addresses property tax reform and immigration. Senator Mary Elizabeth Coleman joins in the final segment.
State Sen. Andrew Koenig (R-Manchester) will serve his 16th and final year in the Missouri Legislature in 2024, due to term limits. He chairs the Senate Education and Workforce Development Committee and is also seeking the GOP nomination for Missouri Treasurer in 2024. Senator Koenig joined us live this morning on 939 the Eagle's "Wake Up Mid-Missouri" to preview the 2024 session, which begins January 3 in Jefferson City. One of his top priorities is what he describes as initiative petition reform. Senator Koenig tells listeners that changing the Missouri Constitution should require a higher threshold than a simple majority. Democrats strongly oppose the change, saying Missouri voters have been approving things like a minimum wage increase, Medicaid expansion and a right-to-work repeal because GOP lawmakers are not listening to voters. But Senator Koenig disagrees. He wants to see an IP bill pass that would require a proposed Missouri constitutional amendment to be approved by voters in five of the state's eight congressional districts. Senator Koenig says cities shouldn't be able to tell farmers what to do and versa. Senator Koenig also called for the expansion of school choice and a parental bill of rights on the program. He'll also focus on transgender legislation in 2024:
The state of Missouri will need a new Education Commissioner and Sen. Koenig joined us today to highlight some of the areas in Missouri education that need to be changed.
@TheHeartlandPOD on Twitter and ThreadsCo-HostsSean Diller @SeanDillerCO (Twitter and Post)https://heartlandpod.com/JOIN PATREON FOR MORE - AND JOIN OUR SOCIAL NETWORK!“Change The Conversation”Outro Song: “The World Is On Fire” by American Aquarium http://www.americanaquarium.com/This week on the Friday Flyover: MO GOP candidates cashing big checks, Kansas Gov Laura Kelly announces huge budget surplus, Biden Admin announces $9 B more in student loan forgiveness, Gov. Abbott's got a fever - and the only prescription, is school vouchers, and Bidden-Harris campaign ads hit battleground states. Alright, let's get into it.http://missouriindependent.com/briefs/st-louis-mega-donor-drops-425k-into-missouri-campaigns-in-last-week/St. Louis mega-donor drops $425K into Missouri campaigns - in one weekBY: JASON HANCOCK - OCTOBER 3, 2023 10:00 AMRex Sinquefield, a retired investor from St. Louis and Missouri's most prolific political donor, cut $425,000 worth of checks to PACs supporting eight different candidates in the last week — with the largest going to bolster Lt. Gov. Mike Kehoe's bid for governor. His $250,000 3rd quarter contribution to Kehoe brings Sinquefield's total to $750,000. That's right - Mike Kehoe has taken $750,000 from Rex Sinquefeld.Sinquefield also donated $25,000 each to two GOP candidates for state treasurer — state Sen. Andrew Koenig and state Rep. Cody Smith. He gave $25,000 to Senate President Pro Tem Caleb Rowden, who is rumored to be eyeing a run for secretary of state, and to Sen. Denny Hoskins, who is already in that GOP primary. He also donated $25,000 to two state representatives running for the state Senate: Phil Christofanelli and Chris Dinkins, and to a state senator who is term-limited, Tony Luetkemeyer. Sinquefield has given more than $42 million in campaign contributions in Missouri — mostly to Republicans, though not exclusively. His main policy priorities are defunding the state's public education system and eliminating income taxes.In neighboring Kansas, he helped bankroll a group called Kansans for No Income Tax that promoted, in 2012, one of the largest state tax cuts in history with the support of Republican Gov. Sam Brownback. Sinquefield called the cuts “unbelievably brilliant” and predicted that “there's going to be a cloud of dust … as the businesses move from Missouri to Kansas.”By 2017, National Public Radio reported state lawmakers were seeking to close a $900 million budget gap,[2][Note 2] following nine previous budget cuts.[43] Earlier efforts to close budget gaps had left Kansas "well below national averages" in a wide range of public services from K-12 education to housing to police and fire protection.[4][17]Kansas' sharply reduced revenues following the income-tax repeal led rating agency Moody's to cut the state's bond rating in April from its second-highest bond rating to its third highest. Creative Commons LicenseREPUBLISHOur stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of photos and graphics.https://kansasreflector.com/2023/10/03/kansas-on-track-for-2-6-billion-state-revenue-surplus-1-6-billion-stash-in-rainy-day-fund/Kansas on track for $2.6 billion state revenue surplus, $1.6 billion stash in rainy day fundMountain of cash guarantees political fight over tax, education, health spendingBY: TIM CARPENTER - OCTOBER 3, 2023 1:16 PMDemocratic governor Laura Kelly said, “Because of my administration's work to put our state on solid financial footing, we have been able to grow our economy and make historic investments in schools, roads and law enforcement. Now, it's time to give money back to Kansans through responsible tax cuts.”She urged the Republican-led Legislature to reduce property taxes, grocery sales taxes and drive down taxes on retirees. In addition, Kelly is recommending additional spending on K-12 special education and to expand eligibility for Medicaid to working-poor families. Adam Proffitt, the state budget director, said the Kansas unemployment rate contracted from double digits during the pandemic to 2.7% in August of this year.He also said Kansas has two job openings for every available person in the workforce. Thank you, Governor Kelly. You are my ultra dark horse candidate for Democratic nominee for U.S. President in 2024. Creative Commons LicenseRepublished under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. White House provides another $9 billion in student debt relief as pandemic pause endsBY: ARIANA FIGUEROA - OCTOBER 4, 2023 6:03 PM WASHINGTON — As federal student loan repayments restart, the Biden administration Wednesday announced an additional $9 billion in student loan forgiveness for 125,000 borrowers.“For years, millions of eligible borrowers were unable to access the student debt relief they qualified for, but that's all changed thanks to President Biden and this Administration's relentless efforts to fix the broken student loan system,” U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a statement.The announcement comes days after federal student loan repayments restarted following a nearly three-year pause due to the pandemic. Borrowers with federal student loans have the option of an on-ramp program, where they can delay making payments for 12 months, but interest will still accrue.The $9 billion in new relief includes $5.2 billion in forgiveness for 53,000 borrowers in the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program; $2.8 billion in forgiveness for 51,000 borrowers from a one-time fix to income-driven repayment plans; and $1.2 billion in forgiveness for 22,000 borrowers with permanent disabilities.The PSLF program forgives remaining student loan debt after qualifying public sector and non-profit employees have made 10 years' worth of monthly payments. Since October 2021, the Biden administration has forgiven more than 715,000 borrowers with PSLF loans, totaling $50.8 billion.With Wednesday's announcement, more than 854,870 federal student loan borrowers have had their student loan debt forgiven through the IDR adjustment, totaling nearly $42 billion in relief, the administration said.The Department of Education also implemented a new income driven repayment program known as Saving on A Valuable Education, or SAVE, and many borrowers have been automatically funneled into the program. It's a plan that, for some borrowers, could result in no monthly payments.So far, the Biden administration has approved up to $127 billion in student debt cancellation for about 3.6 million borrowers.https://www.texastribune.org/2023/09/29/greg-abbott-texas-leglislature-school-vouchers/Gov. Greg Abbot wants school vouchers and he wants them right now!BY BRIAN LOPEZ AND WILLIAM MELHADOSEPT. 29, 2023[He] has notified the Texas Legislature that a third special session will begin on Oct. 9.A Sept. 26 letter signed by Abbott and addressed to Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and House Speaker Dade Phelan, did not indicate the focus of this special session. But the governor has said repeatedly the next special session would focus on public education, including the issue of school vouchers that would allow parents to use taxpayer dollars to pay for their children's private schooling. Lawmakers are to return to Austin on Oct. 9 at 1 p.m. This year's regular legislative session ended in a stalemate between the House and Senate over education savings accounts, a voucher program that would allow parents access to a state-managed account to pay for private school tuition.The Senate tried different ways to pass an education savings account program — even tacking it on to the only school finance bill the House advanced during the session — but Democrats and rural Republicans blocked it from moving forward.Abbott recently said that if lawmakers fail to pass a school choice proposal, he won't hesitate to bring lawmakers back. And he promised political consequences for those who get in his way.Abbott said “If we do not win in that first special session, we will have another special special session and we'll come back again. And then if we don't win that time, I think it's time to send this to the voters themselves.”Biden touts blue-collar roots in latest AZ adBY: JIM SMALL - OCTOBER 3, 2023 5:00 AMThe Biden campaign today is launching a new TV ad in Arizona and other battleground states that spotlights how the president's agenda is lowering costs for America's middle class.The ad, titled “Never Left,” is part of a 16-week, $25 million campaign that launched last month. The ad focuses on Joe Biden's roots in Scranton, a blue-collar city in northeastern Pennsylvania, and his pursuit of policies that benefit low- and middle-income Americans.The narrator says of Biden, “He knows what life is like for working people and knows middle-class life is too expensive right now,”The ad highlights Biden administration policies capping insulin costs at $35 for some seniors, allowing Medicare to negotiate certain drug prices and investments in the American clean energy sector, which the campaign said would lower power costs for families.The Biden campaign said the ad will run on broadcast TV and cable channels, and will target programming that is widely watched by general election voters, including “Dancing with the Stars,” “Bachelor in Paradise” and NFL games.Julie Chavez Rodriguez, the campaign manager for Biden-Harris 2024 said “This ad serves as an early reminder of the choice Americans will face next year: between MAGA Republicans whose agenda would give tax handouts to the ultra-rich at the expense of working people, or Joe Biden and Kamala Harris' agenda for the middle class.”We'll see what happens!Welp that's it for me. Stories for today's show originally published by States Newsroom outlets the Missouri Independent, Kansas Reflector, Texas Tribune, Arizona Mirror. Additional Rex Sinquefeld information from National Public Radio.
@TheHeartlandPOD on Twitter and ThreadsCo-HostsSean Diller @SeanDillerCO (Twitter and Post)https://heartlandpod.com/JOIN PATREON FOR MORE - AND JOIN OUR SOCIAL NETWORK!“Change The Conversation”Outro Song: “The World Is On Fire” by American Aquarium http://www.americanaquarium.com/This week on the Friday Flyover: MO GOP candidates cashing big checks, Kansas Gov Laura Kelly announces huge budget surplus, Biden Admin announces $9 B more in student loan forgiveness, Gov. Abbott's got a fever - and the only prescription, is school vouchers, and Bidden-Harris campaign ads hit battleground states. Alright, let's get into it.http://missouriindependent.com/briefs/st-louis-mega-donor-drops-425k-into-missouri-campaigns-in-last-week/St. Louis mega-donor drops $425K into Missouri campaigns - in one weekBY: JASON HANCOCK - OCTOBER 3, 2023 10:00 AMRex Sinquefield, a retired investor from St. Louis and Missouri's most prolific political donor, cut $425,000 worth of checks to PACs supporting eight different candidates in the last week — with the largest going to bolster Lt. Gov. Mike Kehoe's bid for governor. His $250,000 3rd quarter contribution to Kehoe brings Sinquefield's total to $750,000. That's right - Mike Kehoe has taken $750,000 from Rex Sinquefeld.Sinquefield also donated $25,000 each to two GOP candidates for state treasurer — state Sen. Andrew Koenig and state Rep. Cody Smith. He gave $25,000 to Senate President Pro Tem Caleb Rowden, who is rumored to be eyeing a run for secretary of state, and to Sen. Denny Hoskins, who is already in that GOP primary. He also donated $25,000 to two state representatives running for the state Senate: Phil Christofanelli and Chris Dinkins, and to a state senator who is term-limited, Tony Luetkemeyer. Sinquefield has given more than $42 million in campaign contributions in Missouri — mostly to Republicans, though not exclusively. His main policy priorities are defunding the state's public education system and eliminating income taxes.In neighboring Kansas, he helped bankroll a group called Kansans for No Income Tax that promoted, in 2012, one of the largest state tax cuts in history with the support of Republican Gov. Sam Brownback. Sinquefield called the cuts “unbelievably brilliant” and predicted that “there's going to be a cloud of dust … as the businesses move from Missouri to Kansas.”By 2017, National Public Radio reported state lawmakers were seeking to close a $900 million budget gap,[2][Note 2] following nine previous budget cuts.[43] Earlier efforts to close budget gaps had left Kansas "well below national averages" in a wide range of public services from K-12 education to housing to police and fire protection.[4][17]Kansas' sharply reduced revenues following the income-tax repeal led rating agency Moody's to cut the state's bond rating in April from its second-highest bond rating to its third highest. Creative Commons LicenseREPUBLISHOur stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of photos and graphics.https://kansasreflector.com/2023/10/03/kansas-on-track-for-2-6-billion-state-revenue-surplus-1-6-billion-stash-in-rainy-day-fund/Kansas on track for $2.6 billion state revenue surplus, $1.6 billion stash in rainy day fundMountain of cash guarantees political fight over tax, education, health spendingBY: TIM CARPENTER - OCTOBER 3, 2023 1:16 PMDemocratic governor Laura Kelly said, “Because of my administration's work to put our state on solid financial footing, we have been able to grow our economy and make historic investments in schools, roads and law enforcement. Now, it's time to give money back to Kansans through responsible tax cuts.”She urged the Republican-led Legislature to reduce property taxes, grocery sales taxes and drive down taxes on retirees. In addition, Kelly is recommending additional spending on K-12 special education and to expand eligibility for Medicaid to working-poor families. Adam Proffitt, the state budget director, said the Kansas unemployment rate contracted from double digits during the pandemic to 2.7% in August of this year.He also said Kansas has two job openings for every available person in the workforce. Thank you, Governor Kelly. You are my ultra dark horse candidate for Democratic nominee for U.S. President in 2024. Creative Commons LicenseRepublished under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. White House provides another $9 billion in student debt relief as pandemic pause endsBY: ARIANA FIGUEROA - OCTOBER 4, 2023 6:03 PM WASHINGTON — As federal student loan repayments restart, the Biden administration Wednesday announced an additional $9 billion in student loan forgiveness for 125,000 borrowers.“For years, millions of eligible borrowers were unable to access the student debt relief they qualified for, but that's all changed thanks to President Biden and this Administration's relentless efforts to fix the broken student loan system,” U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a statement.The announcement comes days after federal student loan repayments restarted following a nearly three-year pause due to the pandemic. Borrowers with federal student loans have the option of an on-ramp program, where they can delay making payments for 12 months, but interest will still accrue.The $9 billion in new relief includes $5.2 billion in forgiveness for 53,000 borrowers in the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program; $2.8 billion in forgiveness for 51,000 borrowers from a one-time fix to income-driven repayment plans; and $1.2 billion in forgiveness for 22,000 borrowers with permanent disabilities.The PSLF program forgives remaining student loan debt after qualifying public sector and non-profit employees have made 10 years' worth of monthly payments. Since October 2021, the Biden administration has forgiven more than 715,000 borrowers with PSLF loans, totaling $50.8 billion.With Wednesday's announcement, more than 854,870 federal student loan borrowers have had their student loan debt forgiven through the IDR adjustment, totaling nearly $42 billion in relief, the administration said.The Department of Education also implemented a new income driven repayment program known as Saving on A Valuable Education, or SAVE, and many borrowers have been automatically funneled into the program. It's a plan that, for some borrowers, could result in no monthly payments.So far, the Biden administration has approved up to $127 billion in student debt cancellation for about 3.6 million borrowers.https://www.texastribune.org/2023/09/29/greg-abbott-texas-leglislature-school-vouchers/Gov. Greg Abbot wants school vouchers and he wants them right now!BY BRIAN LOPEZ AND WILLIAM MELHADOSEPT. 29, 2023[He] has notified the Texas Legislature that a third special session will begin on Oct. 9.A Sept. 26 letter signed by Abbott and addressed to Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and House Speaker Dade Phelan, did not indicate the focus of this special session. But the governor has said repeatedly the next special session would focus on public education, including the issue of school vouchers that would allow parents to use taxpayer dollars to pay for their children's private schooling. Lawmakers are to return to Austin on Oct. 9 at 1 p.m. This year's regular legislative session ended in a stalemate between the House and Senate over education savings accounts, a voucher program that would allow parents access to a state-managed account to pay for private school tuition.The Senate tried different ways to pass an education savings account program — even tacking it on to the only school finance bill the House advanced during the session — but Democrats and rural Republicans blocked it from moving forward.Abbott recently said that if lawmakers fail to pass a school choice proposal, he won't hesitate to bring lawmakers back. And he promised political consequences for those who get in his way.Abbott said “If we do not win in that first special session, we will have another special special session and we'll come back again. And then if we don't win that time, I think it's time to send this to the voters themselves.”Biden touts blue-collar roots in latest AZ adBY: JIM SMALL - OCTOBER 3, 2023 5:00 AMThe Biden campaign today is launching a new TV ad in Arizona and other battleground states that spotlights how the president's agenda is lowering costs for America's middle class.The ad, titled “Never Left,” is part of a 16-week, $25 million campaign that launched last month. The ad focuses on Joe Biden's roots in Scranton, a blue-collar city in northeastern Pennsylvania, and his pursuit of policies that benefit low- and middle-income Americans.The narrator says of Biden, “He knows what life is like for working people and knows middle-class life is too expensive right now,”The ad highlights Biden administration policies capping insulin costs at $35 for some seniors, allowing Medicare to negotiate certain drug prices and investments in the American clean energy sector, which the campaign said would lower power costs for families.The Biden campaign said the ad will run on broadcast TV and cable channels, and will target programming that is widely watched by general election voters, including “Dancing with the Stars,” “Bachelor in Paradise” and NFL games.Julie Chavez Rodriguez, the campaign manager for Biden-Harris 2024 said “This ad serves as an early reminder of the choice Americans will face next year: between MAGA Republicans whose agenda would give tax handouts to the ultra-rich at the expense of working people, or Joe Biden and Kamala Harris' agenda for the middle class.”We'll see what happens!Welp that's it for me. Stories for today's show originally published by States Newsroom outlets the Missouri Independent, Kansas Reflector, Texas Tribune, Arizona Mirror. Additional Rex Sinquefeld information from National Public Radio.
State Sen. Andrew Koenig joins St. Louis Public Radio's Sarah Kellogg and Jason Rosenbaum to talk about his candidacy for state Treasurer. The Manchester Republican also spoke on why lawmakers need to try again at making the state's constitution harder to amend.
Listen to this segment from The Annie Frey Show where Mike Elam is joined by Missouri State Senator Andrew Koenig to discuss the work he has done on sales tax in Missouri.
THE TIM JONES AND CHRIS ARPS SHOW 0:00 SEG 1 A NewsTalkSTL weekend program called Stories of New Americans interviews immigrants. A woman from Belarus warned not to take the 1st and 2nd Amendments for granted. Today's Speaker's Stump Speech is brought to you by https://www.hansenstree.com/ and is called 'Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone)' 17:07 SEG 2 Andrew Koenig, State Senator for Missouri, talks about announcing a run for treasurer https://twitter.com/Koenig4MO 35:36 SEG 3 DeSantis tries to explain that slaves learned skills | Let's check the polls to see how Tim Scott and Vivek Ramaswamy are doing | DeSantis is Just Boring Copy of Trump https://newstalkstl.com/ FOLLOW TIM - https://twitter.com/SpeakerTimJones FOLLOW CHRIS - https://twitter.com/chris_arps 24/7 LIVESTREAM - http://bit.ly/newstalkstlstream RUMBLE - https://rumble.com/NewsTalkSTL See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Mike Ferguson in the Morning 07-24-23 **Missouri Senator Andrew Koenig announces his campaign for State Treasurer. (@Koenig4MO) (https://electandrewkoenig.com) https://newstalkstl.com/24/7 Livestream: http://bit.ly/newstalkstlstreamRumble: https://rumble.com.NewsTalkSTLSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
THE TIM JONES AND CHRIS ARPS SHOW 0:00 SEG 1 A NewsTalkSTL weekend program called Stories of New Americans interviews immigrants. A woman from Belarus warned not to take the 1st and 2nd Amendments for granted. Today's Speaker's Stump Speech is brought to you by https://www.hansenstree.com/ and is called 'Don't Know What You Got (Till It's Gone)' 17:07 SEG 2 Andrew Koenig, State Senator for Missouri, talks about announcing a run for treasurer https://twitter.com/Koenig4MO 35:36 SEG 3 DeSantis tries to explain that slaves learned skills | Let's check the polls to see how Tim Scott and Vivek Ramaswamy are doing | DeSantis is Just Boring Copy of Trump https://newstalkstl.com/ FOLLOW TIM - https://twitter.com/SpeakerTimJones FOLLOW CHRIS - https://twitter.com/chris_arps 24/7 LIVESTREAM - http://bit.ly/newstalkstlstream RUMBLE - https://rumble.com/NewsTalkSTL See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today's guest is Andrew Koenig. Andrew began his career in CITY Furniture as an Operations Associate in 2007, where he spent a significant amount of time streamlining the Operations Department for the first 8 years of his career. He now serves as CEO of CITY Furniture, overseeing all departments of the business. Andrew joins us on this episode to highlight CITY Furniture's lean philosophy, green-focused initiatives, and community give-back programs.
Opened as Waterbed City in the 70's, City Furniture's evolution into a leader offering stylish furniture and exceptional customer service is no accident. In this episode, second generation CEO Andrew Koenig connects with SFBJ Editor in Chief Mel Melendez to share how he and his team are continuously improving every aspect of their business to thrive in any economic cycle.
People might be surprised to know that the furniture industry handles complexity by making robust use of technologies such as augmented reality. And while they might not know, they can certainly feel the improved customer experience provided by companies that work and win as a team.Andrew Koenig began his full-time career with City Furniture in January 2006. He started in the Receiving Department and worked his way up through almost every division of the company. As the CEO of this Florida-based company, he now oversees all departments of the business. Since 2007, City Furniture has been on a Lean journey, one that has ushered in turnover reduction, operational process improvements, better customer experience and associate satisfaction, financial success and more.In this episode, Andrew joins hosts Scott Luton and Greg White to share his perspective on company leadership and community engagement:• How studying Lean philosophy at Toyota Headquarters in Japan has impacted City Furniture and fueled its growth• His priorities for supply chain performance and improvement• The importance of corporate responsibility programs like City Furniture's Green Promise and 5% Giving PledgeAdditional Links & Resources:Learn more about Supply Chain Now: https://supplychainnow.comCheck out our new Supply Chain Now Media Kit: https://bit.ly/3emdLcKSubscribe to Supply Chain Now and all other Supply Chain Now programs: https://supplychainnow.com/subscribeJoin the NOW Community: http://bit.ly/41kpUSOLeveraging Logistics and Supply Chain for Ukraine: https://vectorgl.com/stand-with-ukraine/2023 Q1 U.S. Bank Freight Payment Index: https://bit.ly/3VuwnIkWEBINAR- “Decoding Digital Transformation” – Charting a path forward: https://bit.ly/3VvVc6VWEBINAR- 5 Reasons Network Design is Essential to Supply Chain Resiliency: https://bit.ly/3MxcCNsWEBINAR- Feeling the squeeze? How to Meet OTIF Targets in an Uncertain World: https://bit.ly/42eMZFZThis episode is hosted by Scott Luton and Greg White. For additional information, please visit our dedicated show page at: https://supplychainnow.com/great-relationships-secret-sauce-CEO-city-furniture-1126
Host: Kevin Smith Dives into the weekly news most impactful to the HeartlandHEADLINESMissouri House advances restrictions on gender-affirming health care and transgender athletesSTL Public Radio - https://news.stlpublicradio.org/government-politics-issues/2023-04-11/missouri-house-advances-restrictions-on-gender-affirming-health-care-and-transgender-athletesMissouri House Republicans vote to defund librariesHeartland Signal - https://heartlandsignal.com/2023/04/11/missouri-house-republicans-vote-to-defund-libraries/LIGHTNING ROUNDTexas,A small Texas county is weighing whether to shut down its public library system.NBC - https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/llano-county-texas-weighs-closing-local-library-federal-judge-orders-b-rcna79173An Austin woman and her husband flee to Colorado for medically necessary AbortionFox News - https://www.fox7austin.com/news/texas-abortion-austin-couple-travel-out-of-state-medically-necessaryA Texas Republican groomerVice - https://www.vice.com/en/article/qjv8dq/texas-bryan-slaton-internSouth DakotaMore Republican groomer newsArgus Leader - https://www.argusleader.com/story/news/politics/2023/04/11/joel-koskan-pleads-guilty-to-2-counts-of-felony-incest/70099177007/ColoradoThe more than 700,000 Coloradans with medical debt may soon have that debt removed from their credit scoresColorado Politics - https://www.coloradopolitics.com/legislature/colorado-remove-medical-debt-credit-score/article_0382a16c-d241-11ed-ae3b-d3d130976491.htmlMissouriMissouri AG doesn't want the public to know he's pushing wild legal theories in abortion casesMissouri Independent - https://missouriindependent.com/2023/04/07/missouri-ag-doesnt-want-the-public-to-know-hes-pushing-wild-legal-theories-in-abortion-cases/Sen. Andrew Koenig, seeker of fixing things that ain't broke, focuses on Parents' Bill of RightsMissouri Independent - https://missouriindependent.com/2023/04/12/missouri-house-hearing-on-parents-bill-of-rights-centers-diversity-education/North CarolinaChurch buys forgives $3 million in medical debtThe Dispatch - https://www.the-dispatch.com/news/local/church-forgives-3-million-in-medical-debt-for-davidson-county-residents/article_94ee0e4d-3255-5cb1-9661-ce13b4b85425.htmlRIP Medical Debt - https://ripmedicaldebt.org/
Host: Kevin Smith Dives into the weekly news most impactful to the HeartlandHEADLINESMissouri House advances restrictions on gender-affirming health care and transgender athletesSTL Public Radio - https://news.stlpublicradio.org/government-politics-issues/2023-04-11/missouri-house-advances-restrictions-on-gender-affirming-health-care-and-transgender-athletesMissouri House Republicans vote to defund librariesHeartland Signal - https://heartlandsignal.com/2023/04/11/missouri-house-republicans-vote-to-defund-libraries/LIGHTNING ROUNDTexas,A small Texas county is weighing whether to shut down its public library system.NBC - https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/llano-county-texas-weighs-closing-local-library-federal-judge-orders-b-rcna79173An Austin woman and her husband flee to Colorado for medically necessary AbortionFox News - https://www.fox7austin.com/news/texas-abortion-austin-couple-travel-out-of-state-medically-necessaryA Texas Republican groomerVice - https://www.vice.com/en/article/qjv8dq/texas-bryan-slaton-internSouth DakotaMore Republican groomer newsArgus Leader - https://www.argusleader.com/story/news/politics/2023/04/11/joel-koskan-pleads-guilty-to-2-counts-of-felony-incest/70099177007/ColoradoThe more than 700,000 Coloradans with medical debt may soon have that debt removed from their credit scoresColorado Politics - https://www.coloradopolitics.com/legislature/colorado-remove-medical-debt-credit-score/article_0382a16c-d241-11ed-ae3b-d3d130976491.htmlMissouriMissouri AG doesn't want the public to know he's pushing wild legal theories in abortion casesMissouri Independent - https://missouriindependent.com/2023/04/07/missouri-ag-doesnt-want-the-public-to-know-hes-pushing-wild-legal-theories-in-abortion-cases/Sen. Andrew Koenig, seeker of fixing things that ain't broke, focuses on Parents' Bill of RightsMissouri Independent - https://missouriindependent.com/2023/04/12/missouri-house-hearing-on-parents-bill-of-rights-centers-diversity-education/North CarolinaChurch buys forgives $3 million in medical debtThe Dispatch - https://www.the-dispatch.com/news/local/church-forgives-3-million-in-medical-debt-for-davidson-county-residents/article_94ee0e4d-3255-5cb1-9661-ce13b4b85425.htmlRIP Medical Debt - https://ripmedicaldebt.org/
Throwback Trivia Takedown takes trivia back to the glory days from the late 20th century to the early 2000's. Two challengers go head to head in a duel of the decades where the one with the most nostalgic knowledge of pop culture comes out victorious. Do you know your nostalgia? bfopnetwork.com
Heartland POD on Twitter - @TheHeartlandPOD Co-HostsAdam Sommer @Adam_Sommer85 (Twitter) @adam_sommer85 (Post)Rachel Parker @msraitchetp (Post)Sean Diller @SeanDillerCO (Post)https://heartlandpod.com/JOIN PATREON FOR MORE!“Change The Conversation”Adam's Open: WOKE - the new four letter word What should have been: The 50th Aniv. of RoeGood primer on “Culture War” transition of GOP - if general economic policies are the same or similar to Dems, then how to differentiate https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/01/republicans-democrats-forever-culture-war/621184/True or False The moderate republican is deadhttps://www.semafor.com/article/01/16/2023/americas-next-top-moderate-which-house-republicans-want-the-title“You can fit more message behind a person than you can a party.” - Rachel Parker Yeah…No, YeahWisconsin GOP makes conversion therapy (Abuse) legal againhttps://heartlandsignal.com/2023/01/16/wisconsin-gop-makes-conversion-therapy-legal-again/Agape Boarding School Has Rebranded Buy or SellAmericans United for Separation of Church And State can turn the tideWebsite: https://www.au.org/Missouri abortion ban lawsuit https://missouriindependent.com/2023/01/19/lawsuit-seeks-to-overturn-missouri-abortion-ban-as-violation-of-religious-rights/Calling out MO Leg for blatant violation of 1st amendment https://twitter.com/americansunited/status/1616187701601992704?s=20&t=vtadMILuLqra61hAiZA2dgAmericans United is in a full court presshttps://twitter.com/americansunited/status/1616488845977214976?s=20&t=vtadMILuLqra61hAiZA2dgOp Ed On Dobbs: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/01/20/abortion-dobbs-establishment-clause-sotomayor/ The Big One Culture wars ramp up to fever pitchDeSantis admin bans black history https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/19/politics/ron-desantis-ap-african-american-studies/index.htmlMissouri senate com hearing all about “CRT” https://missouriindependent.com/2023/01/18/critical-race-theory-discussed-in-missouri-senate-committee-meeting/That thing we say about fucking suburban conservative lawmakers all the goddamned time? “The bill sponsored by the committee's chair, Republican Sen. Andrew Koenig of Manchester, contains similar provisions but also restricts critical race theory – which Koenig did not define but instead provided examples of, like “individuals of any race, ethnicity, color, or national origin are inherently superior or inferior.”
Heartland POD on Twitter - @TheHeartlandPOD Co-HostsAdam Sommer @Adam_Sommer85 (Twitter) @adam_sommer85 (Post)Rachel Parker @msraitchetp (Post)Sean Diller @SeanDillerCO (Post)https://heartlandpod.com/JOIN PATREON FOR MORE!“Change The Conversation”Adam's Open: WOKE - the new four letter word What should have been: The 50th Aniv. of RoeGood primer on “Culture War” transition of GOP - if general economic policies are the same or similar to Dems, then how to differentiate https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/01/republicans-democrats-forever-culture-war/621184/True or False The moderate republican is deadhttps://www.semafor.com/article/01/16/2023/americas-next-top-moderate-which-house-republicans-want-the-title“You can fit more message behind a person than you can a party.” - Rachel Parker Yeah…No, YeahWisconsin GOP makes conversion therapy (Abuse) legal againhttps://heartlandsignal.com/2023/01/16/wisconsin-gop-makes-conversion-therapy-legal-again/Agape Boarding School Has Rebranded Buy or SellAmericans United for Separation of Church And State can turn the tideWebsite: https://www.au.org/Missouri abortion ban lawsuit https://missouriindependent.com/2023/01/19/lawsuit-seeks-to-overturn-missouri-abortion-ban-as-violation-of-religious-rights/Calling out MO Leg for blatant violation of 1st amendment https://twitter.com/americansunited/status/1616187701601992704?s=20&t=vtadMILuLqra61hAiZA2dgAmericans United is in a full court presshttps://twitter.com/americansunited/status/1616488845977214976?s=20&t=vtadMILuLqra61hAiZA2dgOp Ed On Dobbs: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/01/20/abortion-dobbs-establishment-clause-sotomayor/ The Big One Culture wars ramp up to fever pitchDeSantis admin bans black history https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/19/politics/ron-desantis-ap-african-american-studies/index.htmlMissouri senate com hearing all about “CRT” https://missouriindependent.com/2023/01/18/critical-race-theory-discussed-in-missouri-senate-committee-meeting/That thing we say about fucking suburban conservative lawmakers all the goddamned time? “The bill sponsored by the committee's chair, Republican Sen. Andrew Koenig of Manchester, contains similar provisions but also restricts critical race theory – which Koenig did not define but instead provided examples of, like “individuals of any race, ethnicity, color, or national origin are inherently superior or inferior.”
Missouri State Senator Andrew Koenig joins Tom and Carol talking about his bill that would ban Critical Race Theory in Missouri.
MIKE FERGUSON IN THE MORNING 0:00 SEG 1 Andrew Beckwith PRESIDENT of the Massachusetts Family Institute https://www.mafamily.org/meet-our-staff/ 10:21 SEG 2 19:07 SEG 3 Senator Andrew Koenig on the special tax session 29:26 SEG 4See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MIKE FERGUSON IN THE MORNING Senator Andrew KoenigSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today, Cirroc Lofton (Jake Sisko in Star Trek Deep Space Nine) and Ryan T. Husk review DS9's season 2, episode 10, "Sanctuary." We are also joined by very special guest (and Aron Eisenberg's wife), Malissa Longo! Hosted & Produced by Ryan T. Husk.Audio Remastered by Scott Jensen. Every week, we rewatch an episode of Deep Space Nine and relive/review it, starting with episode 1, "Emissary."Join us! Rewatch DS9 every week and join in the discussion - we'd love to have you!If you enjoy our content please leave us a five star rating and comment/review.Support and join the community here: https://www.patreon.com/The7thRuleWatch the episodes with full video here: https://www.youtube.com/c/The7thRuleSocial media:https://twitter.com/7thRulehttps://www.facebook.com/The7thRule/https://www.facebook.com/groups/The7thRuleGet cool T7R merchandise here: https://the-7th-rule.creator-spring.com/Cirroc's sister, Merone, makes amazing East-African inspired clothing and items for sale at:https://www.abyssiniankiosk.com/Malissa Longo creates fun and functional Star Trek art at:https://www.walkingartmadebymalissa.com/We continue The 7th Rule journey without our friend, our brother, Aron Eisenberg. He is still with us in spirit, in stories, in laughter, and in memories, and the show must go on.
We're lifting the curtain on corporate giving with a millennial leader who is growing a successful company and giving back millions. Andrew Koenig is the CEO of City Furniture in Florida. Through his own volunteering Andrew built a strong relationship with a fundraiser at American Heart Association, Lindsay Leblang. He was so impressed by the work they did together, Andrew invited Lindsay to join his team to bring strategy to City's corporate philanthropy. As a fundraiser herself, Lindsay shares the secret to a successful pitch and what it really takes to get corporate contributions for your organization. Know More. Raise More. is presented by Insightful. The team at Insightful knows connecting with donors is hard. That's why Insightful helps fundraisers like you better know your donors (and the people you would like to be donors) so you can: Raise more moneyAdvance your missionDo more good in the worldThere's a big change happening right now affecting fundraisers. Over the next decade, up to $70 trillion dollars will shift from aging baby boomers to millennials. This wealth transfer is already underway.Are you prepared to work with millennials?Start by downloading Insightful's free ebook:9 Insights Fundraisers Need to Know to Prepare for Millennial Major Donors. Just head to insightfulphilanthropy.com/ebook
All your lotions, potions and more have this in it. (And if they don't, you should check why not.) What is it, you ask? The all-important skincare base. It's the literal foundation of products, affecting everything from efficacy to experience to eco-consciousness. Murad's head of research and development, Andrew Koenig, takes us behind the scenes of how chemists formulate with bases to create skincare magic. Be sure to visit wellconnected.murad.com for more science-based, skin-wellness stories.
Independent furniture retailers often get a bad rap. The stereotyped image of a big store out on the highway with bad lighting, boxes of furniture lined up like tombstones and rows of recliners—it's a hard image to shake. Make no mistake, those kind of stores still exist, but then there's City Furniture. Started as a waterbed outlet in the 70s, the company shifted focus in the 1990s and is now the largest independent furniture retailer in Florida, with more than 3,000 employees and 35 locations. On this episode of Retail Watch, president Andrew Koenig (he's the son of the founder) tells host Warren Shoulberg about what it's like to run a family-owned retailer, the challenges and opportunities of COVID, and why home furnishings is a fashion business.This episode of the podcast is sponsored by Square.
Missouri State Sen Andrew Koenig joins Marc to preview the special legislative session in Jefferson City to address the budget. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
HEARTLAND HEADLINESMO School District wrestles with teaching raceCongressional Democrats retiring rather than face midtermSuicide prevention outreach targets Missouri gun shop ownersACA special COVID enrollment period sees nearly a million new health insurance signupsLIGHTNING ROUNDMO Legislature passes private school voucher programColorado Gov. Jared Polis pushes bill establishing Early Childhood Education DepartmentGOP Rep Liz Cheney of Wyoming torches Trump as she fights to hold seat on leadershipKansas push for Constitutional Convention falls flatSHOP THE STORE NOW! STORE: https://www.heartlandstrong.org/shop
HEARTLAND HEADLINESMO School District wrestles with teaching raceCongressional Democrats retiring rather than face midtermSuicide prevention outreach targets Missouri gun shop ownersACA special COVID enrollment period sees nearly a million new health insurance signupsLIGHTNING ROUNDMO Legislature passes private school voucher programColorado Gov. Jared Polis pushes bill establishing Early Childhood Education DepartmentGOP Rep Liz Cheney of Wyoming torches Trump as she fights to hold seat on leadershipKansas push for Constitutional Convention falls flatSHOP THE STORE NOW! STORE: https://www.heartlandstrong.org/shop
EPISODE GUIDEOpening Statement - 5 minLHAC w/ Rachel Gonzalez - 14min 20 secTalkin' Politics - 41min 30 sec Bill 952 article (1619)HB 952 textAmendment via TwitterBiden Approval
EPISODE GUIDEOpening Statement - 5 minLHAC w/ Rachel Gonzalez - 14min 20 secTalkin' Politics - 41min 30 sec Bill 952 article (1619)HB 952 textAmendment via TwitterBiden Approval
Mark speaks with KMOX's Kevin Wheeler about sports, then to Missouri State Senator Andrew Koeniga about ongoing concerns in the Rockwood School District and Mark Skaer, Gateway East Trails promotion director, about the upcoming Tour de Stooges bicycle ride this Saturday. Plus the Clip of the Day. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Andrew Koenig, President at CITY Furniture, tells the story of how his father and uncle's waterbed-selling endeavor evolved into south Florida's number one furniture retailer. He also goes in-depth about the company's supply chain, as well as the rebirth of the waterbed. Ajay is just waking up, and Vincent loves to party.
Andrew Koenig graduated with degrees in Finance and Accounting from Elon University in 2005 and received his MBA in Entrepreneurship […]
Missouri State Senator Andrew Koenig (R-Manchester) joins the show to discuss his proposed legislation to lift COVID restrictions on small businesses.
Commander of the St. Louis Metropolitan Pandemic Task Force, Dr. Alex Garza, provides clarity on some of the public health assertions made by Missouri Sen. Andrew Koenig on Tuesday when he introduced a proposal to limit the actions of local municipalities as it relates to the pandemic.
Missouri state Sen. Andrew Koenig of West St. Louis County discusses legislation he's introducing to curtail local governments' ability to enact COVID-19 restrictions. This comes amid some GOP outcry over St. Louis County Executive Sam Page's indoor dining curbs.
Missouri State Senator Andrew Koenig has introduced a bill that would curtail the power of county executives when it comes to COVID restrictions. Dr. Alexander Garza of the St. Louis Metropolitan Pandemic Task Force discusses the anomaly in the local coronavirus data yesterday and restrictions with restaurants. Jon Ziegler of Mediaite discusses his daughter’s attempts to get their neighborhood to participate in Christmas caroling and Christmas decorations. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Sen. Andrew Koenig and Rep. Deb Lavender join Scott Faughn this week to discuss their heated race for SD 15 and talk about their resumes.
Sen. Andrew Koenig returns to Politically Speaking to talk with St. Louis Public Radio’s Jason Rosenbaum about his re-election campaign in Missouri’s 15th Senate District. Koenig represents cities like Ballwin, Manchester, Valley Park and Kirkwood. He’s squaring off against state Rep. Deb Lavender, D-Kirkwood, in a contest most observers believe is the most competitive legislative race in the state this year.
State Rep. Deb Lavender is the latest guest on the Politically Speaking podcast, where she talks with St. Louis Public Radio’s Jason Rosenbaum about running in the competitive 15th District Senate contest. The 15th District takes in portions of south central and southwest St. Louis County, which includes cities like Kirkwood, Ballwin, Manchester, Twin Oaks and Valley Park. Lavender is squaring off against Sen. Andrew Koenig, a Manchester Republican who won his general election in 2016 by nearly 20 percentage points. Koenig is slated to record an episode of Politically Speaking in October.
Rapping on Racin September 7, 2020 Bill Korch has a special report on the Red Miley Rumble at Pittsburgh’s Pennsylvania Motor Speedway. Howie Balis has Victory Lane interviews with Bedford Speedway Winner Mason Zeigler and Latrobe Speedway Winners Alex Ferree and Andrew Koenig. Guests include Asphalt Sprint Car Driver Rick Holley, Julie Coates the Announcer from Raceway 7, Pro Stock Driver Super Joe Kelly, Big Block Modified driver Rex King Sr. and Sprint Car Driver Davey Jones. If you miss any of Monday’s program you can go to RappinonRacin.com. As always, we want to thank our Marketing Partners Alternative Power Sources, #1 Cochran Automotive, Jennerstown Speedway along with Pittsburgh’s Pennsylvania Motor Speedway, RPS Financial Solutions and Thoma Meat Market. Thank you to our reporters Dave Olivieri, Lenny Batycki, Howie Balis, Jim Balentine, Julie Coates, Tyler Harris, Bill Korch, Mike Lysakowski, and Jim Zufall. Special thanks to senior engineers and our technical advisers Bill Korch, Ted Lewczyk, and Gary Scott along with Bob Miller our Multimedia Data Collection Facilitator.
Rappin on Racin August 24, 2020 Guests include Julie Coates interview with Joel Watson from Raceway 7. Late model driver Andrew Koenig, first time winners Cody Koteles and Joe Maruca, Lenny Batycki’s interview with Branden Matus and Chuck Neely the car owner of the Tyler Dietz Pro Stock at Lernerville Speedway. Interviews with World of Outlaws late model driver Brandon Sheppard and an interview with Lynn Paxton from the Eastern Motorsports Museum of Racing. Victory Lane interviews with Russell Goodell the car owner of Craig Lutz the winner of the NASCAR Modified race and Joe Maruca the late model winner at Jennerstown Speedway. If you miss any of Monday’s program you can go to RappinonRacin.com. As always, we want to thank our Marketing Partners Alternative Power Sources, #1 Cochran Automotive, Dirt Monthly Magazine, Jennerstown Speedway along with Pittsburgh’s Pennsylvania Motor Speedway, RPS Financial Solutions, Speedway Directory and Thoma Meat Market. Thank you to our reporters Dave Olivieri, Lenny Batycki, Howie Balis, Julie Coates, Tyler Harris, Bill Korch, Mike Lysakowski and Jim Zufall. Special thanks to senior engineers and our technical advisers Bill Korch, Ted Lewczyk, and Gary Scott along with Bob Miller our Multimedia Data Collection Facilitator.
Furniture Today’s Editor in Chief Bill McLoughlin hosts a panel of retail thought leaders including Jeff Harris, CEO of Furnitureland South, and Andrew Koenig, president of City Furniture, to discuss the evolving nature of the furniture business in a world being reshaped by a pandemic. Find out how these industry innovators are planning for the remainder of 2020 and beyond. Sponsored by Klaussner Home Furnishings
Palm Beach Tech CEO, Joe Russo, interviews City Furniture President Andrew Koenig on the topic of ‘Next Gen Growth & Social Responsibility.’ Thanks to our sponsors Salesmsg & Devops.com! #SouthFloridaTech
With the changing work environment, Junior Achievement of South Florida's Recipe for Success podcast show has evolved to a virtual, interactive interview session with President and CEO Laurie Sallarulo and various guests. Learn more about these top professionals' main ingredient in their recipe of professional and personal success. Lets's get cooking! This episode welcomes Andrew Koenig, President of CIty Furniture. Andrew graduated with degrees in Finance and Accounting from Elon University in 2005 and received his MBA in Entrepreneurship from Nova Southeastern University – Huizenga College of Business and Entrepreneurship. Andrew began his full-time career with City Furniture in January 2006 in the Receiving Department unloading furniture on containers, and has worked his way up through the company and in almost all divisions of the company. He spent a significant time streamlining the Operations Department in the first 8 years of his career to become one of the industry’s best. Currently, Andrew is serving as President of City Furniture, overseeing all departments of the business. Shortly before joining City Furniture, Andrew studied Lean Philosophy at Toyota’s headquarters in Toyota City, Japan. After learning from Toyota and other Lean companies in the United States and abroad, Andrew introduced Lean Thinking to City Furniture in 2007. Ever since, City Furniture has been on a Lean Journey to create a culture of mutual trust and respect, teamwork and a deep sense of urgency to continuously improve. Since the implementation of Lean, the company has seen many major breakthroughs in turnover reduction, operational process improvement, customer experience, safety, associate satisfaction, strategic planning, financial success and much more. The journey is never over and Andrew & Sr. Team are working very hard to implement Lean Thinking throughout the company which is now been renamed as “The City Furniture Operating System (CFOS).” Andrew is extremely lucky to have 1 amazing wife Deana (who he met during his MBA) and 3 beautiful kids (Aaron 3, Daya 2, & Christian 1). Andrew is the son of Keith Koenig & nephew to Kevin Koenig, the founders of Waterbed City in 1971 which ultimately converted to City Furniture in 1994. Andrew currently serves as the Vice Chair on Junior Achievement's Board of Directors. For more information about City Furniture, visit: https://www.cityfurniture.com/ For more information about Junior Achievement of South Florida, visit https://www.jasouthflorida.org Follow us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jasouthflorida LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/junior-achievement-of-south-florida/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jasouthflorida Twitter: https://twitter.com/JASouthFlorida
Elise’s pick Photo by Andrew Koenig Elise Walsh (THEY/THEM) is a Brooklyn based performer, producer and nightlife personality who grew up in Brisbane Australia. A burlesque chanteuse and costumer, this fiery creature has been tearing up stages since she could walk. An internationally published model and photographer, shimmying their way across the world. With a background in musical theatre in such shows such as 'Guys and Dolls' and the 'Producers', additionally starred as Blanche Dubois in 'A Streetcar Named Desire' at the age of 19. Along with their own productions, Elise performed as drag alter-ego Allegra Spread during Brooklyn pride, Jersey City Pride and at the Folsom St. East kink festival in 2019's NYC pride season, launched a one-person cabaret titled 'Satine Until Now' at Coney Island USA's Music of Curiosities 2019 fall season. March 2020 Elise (nee Satine) starred in sci-fi rock opera Bloody Brains in A Jukebox as Dr. Jayne Mansfield at Coney Island USA. The highly anticipated season was brought to a halt by coronavirus pandemic. We discuss her favorite photo of herself shot by Andrew Koenig..» TIP A BITCH:https://venmo.com/allegraspread» FOLLOW Elise:https://www.facebook.com/elise.walshhttps://www.facebook.com/satinesallumerhttps://www.instagram.com/satine_sallumerhttps://www.facebook.com/allegraspreadhttps://www.instagram.com/allegradraghttps://twitter.com/allegra_spread» VISIT the podcast video links:https://www.jongclemente.com/funshoottvhttp://bit.ly/funshoottv» SUBSCRIBE to the podcast:http://bit.ly/funshootapple» PARTICIPATE by leaving a voicemail:(347) 934-9594» FOLLOW our social media links for updates:https://twitter.com/funshootpodcasthttps://www.instagram.com/funshootpodcast
I sat down (in my basement) w Kat Wodtke and Andrew Koenig, who play together in the country band Long Mama. Koenig also plays in a number of other projects, while Wodtke has an extensive background in theater. I drank beer and they drank margs in thermoses as we discussed their origins playing music, the dynamic of Long Mama, Andrew's various musical collaborations, Alaska, and fixing to record this year. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ben-slowey/support
State Sen. Andrew Koenig is the latest guest on Politically Speaking. The Manchester Republican spoke with St. Louis Public Radio’s Jason Rosenbaum on the end of the 2019 session, including passage of the state’s abortion ban. Koenig represents Missouri’s 15th District, which takes in a portion of St. Louis County. He represents cities like Kirkwood, Wildwood, Manchester and Ballwin. Koenig was first elected to the Missouri House in 2008 and served for four terms. He defeated former state Rep. Rick Stream in a highly competitive primary in 2016 for the 15th District seat, and easily defeated Democratic candidate Stephen Eagleton in the general election.
Amy Klobuchar does a town hall on Fox News, and Justice & Drew have some thoughts. Later, a former special assistant to President Trump, Andrew Koenig, joins them to chat about 2020 and more.
It is time to kick off a new season. Thus, we will set the tone by providing a general anti-pattern definition. Spoiler alert, this season will focus on anti-patterns much like we did software patterns of design a few seasons back. We will drift away from software design and implementation at times due to the more general applicability of anti-patterns. Finding An Anti-Pattern Definition There are a number of functional definitions out there. However, we will go to the source of truth on the Internet, Wikipedia. [Click Here to See The Page] "An anti-pattern is a common response to a recurring problem that is usually ineffective and risks being highly counterproductive. The term, coined in 1995 by Andrew Koenig,[3] was inspired by a book, Design Patterns, which highlights a number of design patterns in software development that its authors considered to be highly reliable and effective. The term was popularized three years later by the book AntiPatterns, which extended its use beyond the field of software design to refer informally to any commonly reinvented but bad solution to a problem. Examples include analysis paralysis, cargo cult programming, death march, groupthink and vendor lock-in." We can see from the above that the modern version of anti-patterns is still young. It spun off of the gang of four book that gave us patterns. However, anti-patterns have been with us since man made his first mistake. The simplest definition is that these tell us what to avoid. Laugh or Cry You might find bits of humor mixed in with the topics we cover. This is intentional. We will be looking at examples that fall under the category of those that you can either laugh or cry at them. You are more likely to laugh at those you have witnessed. On the other hand, you should grab a tissue for those you have lived through. Nevertheless, there are concrete examples for each of the warnings we address. Language Specification We found that software patterns often were supported in every modern language. These anti-patterns go beyond languages and even software in many cases. Thus, we will not even bother going down to a technical level except in those cases where specific examples help our understanding.
Andrew Koenig of Trade Works For America called in to talk about the USMCA (United State, Mexico, Canada agreement) being sent to Congress and its impact on the Commonwealth. He also talked about the low unemployment numbers and how that could affect trade. Listen to his call here…
St. Louis Public Radio's Jason Rosenbaum and Jo Mannies welcome back Sen. Andrew Koenig to the program. Originally published July 18, 2017.
Joseph Huber was a founding member of Milwaukee’s .357 String Band. The .357 String band, despite it’s abrupt breakup, still continues to gain popularity and is known as one of the most influential groups in the recent insurgent country and bluegrass movement. As a solo musician, Huber has been prolific and gaining ground; Huber’s 4th solo release, The Suffering Stage is a shift both in writing style and in its filled-out production style…[looking] beyond his usual minimalist folk recordings. It features many of Milwaukee’s best players, such as Ryan Knudson on pedal steel; Dustin Dobernig on keys; Andrew Koenig on electric guitar; as well as his long-time touring band members–Jason Loveall on fiddle; and Eston Bennett on bass.
On the latest edition of the Politically Speaking podcast, St. Louis Public Radio's Jason Rosenbaum and Jo Mannies welcome state Rep. Andrew Koenig to the show for the first time.
Jimmy Pardo stops by this episode of Alison Rosen Is Your New Best Friend to talk about Never Not Funny, hating women for four years, doing theater in high school, high school reunions and what he was expecting versus what he found, using charm to avoid getting beat up, therapy, allergies, OCD, being on the receiving end of the Heimlich, affect vs. effect, the death of his brother-in-law Andrew Koenig and so much more. Plus we took your questions over twitter and did a round of Just Me Or Everyone.
The show opens with the passionate plea of Walter Koenig, father of Andrew Koenig, a former television star that took his own life recently. In addition, Marie Osmond's 18-year-old son also committed suicide very recently, leaving a devastated family and set of friends. Aime Lynn and Chris talk about the very real impact that suicide has on everyone in this 1st part of our discussion series on suicide.
Aime Lynn and Chris continue their discussion of two recent high profile suicides (Andrew Koenig and Marie Osmond's Son) and their powerful reminder on the very real threat of suicide with depression. Clips from Ohio State researcher of mood disorders and suicide Dr. Paul Granello appear at the beginning of the show.
Our thoughts and prayers are with the family of Andrew Koenig tonight. TV: Fringe renewed for 3rd season Smallville renewed for 10th season, Chuck has another season but……so does Heroes. The curse of Chi McBride continues as The Human Target tanks and will not be renewed. Pat from Double Midnight talks about GraniteCon – March […]
Kara walks in late but makes up for it with a deep cleavage. She is starting to realize she may not like her family listening to the show. Sam talks about being a father to two teens. Strip clubs and why they're not such a great thing. The disappearance and tragic death of actor Andrew Koenig, and a discussion on depression. We are joined by Tommy Bethel, a big fan of the show and a newly-published poet. He reads from his new book "Ramblings and Reflections of An American Poet."
The fourth episode on the cult of celebrity. In this episode I discuss the suicide of actor Andrew Koenig. Andrew Koenig was on Growing Pains in the 80s. His father Walter played Chekov in the original Star Trek. Andrew was my neighbor down the street, and I could tell that he seemed lonely and depressed. I saw him just the day before he left LA for Vancouver, when he was giving things away, including a lot of old vintage Star Wars / Star Trek memorabilia, that seemed to be valuable. I grapple with the opportunities I had (and forfeited) to share Christ's love with him, and whether it would have made a difference.
Kara walks in late but makes up for it with a deep cleavage. She is starting to realize she may not like her family listening to the show. Sam talks about being a father to two teens. Strip clubs and why they're not such a great thing. The disappearance and tragic death of actor Andrew Koenig, and a discussion on depression. We are joined by Tommy Bethel, a big fan of the show and a newly-published poet. He reads from his new book "Ramblings and Reflections of An American Poet."
The body of actor Andrew Koenig was found in Vancouver’s Stanley Park yesterday. His father, Walter Koenig, said that his son “took his own life, and was in a lot of pain.” Like most of my generation, I grew up with Walter Koenig as Chekhov on Star Trek, and he played a superb villain much […]